If it's pushing you around more than you can control, yeah. If it just moves you a bit, it's OK. Be sure your tires and brakes are in good shape, though. A blowout while you're being pushed around would ruin your day.

wizer

No it isn't dangerous. In fact the more wind and the more your blown around the safer it is, moron.

sgoldperson

YES it is dangerous. YES your car is REALLY being blown to a degree. If you can control the car then you are ok, but really be careful. I have a light car and have felt my car being moved. I still had control of it, but those strong winds in a light car aren't safe.

Lover not a Fighter

Yes. Slow down or just pull over until the wind dies down. Cars are designed to take head-on winds to over 100 mph. But it is NOT design for heavy cross winds.

Rarely cars do flip over. But most likely the car will lose traction and skid or slide.

Good Luck...

wifeofratt

Of Course! You can be blown off the road, or overcorrect and lose control. Pull over til it dies down or SLOW DOWN!

UCANTCME

I have always said this about small cars especially the smart car and yes its very dangerous and you should pull over and stop if the wind is blowing to hardâ€¦â€¦

Texas Underdog

Yes, Definately can be Dangerous.
==========================

Lutzkrieg

Cars are aerodynamically designed now days and you compensate for windshear even though yo may have to drive a little slower. You may like to take another answerers idea of pulling over and hope you don;'t get a week of strong wind but I really doubt that. I'm not saying gale force winds should be an occasion for sight-seeing as in a violent thunderstorm. Car makers wouldnt be allowed to produce cars that can be picked up by normal weather and flipped. I drove all the way from Queensland to Melbourne on the hiway in the middle of the night in a thunderstorm at normal speed in a ford festiva quite confidently.
Some sections of hiways have natural wind sheer most of the time when they funnel wind.
Basically no, wind sheer is a natural occurance and your car should be designed to handle it. Usually if someone flips a car, there are other factors as well as the wind sheer. Fatigue and wind sheer do not mix. You adjust and compensate for wind sheer as you drive and fatigue decreases your reactibility.
The other thing that can happen in wind in any car, as shown in the Bathurst 1000 car race in Australia is when one of the cars took a dip to fast and got airborne. In this case the car was lifted from underneath and flipped killing the driver.
As I said, the car is aerodynamic. This however that's from the top. Underneath is flat and makes a good frisbee type surface.
Besides most cars today are put through wind tunnel testing as part of the design process just as crash tests. So have no fear about driving a small car in the wind so long as youre not doing anything stupid and you feel competant enough to drive in these conditions. Youre safer in your small car than in a MPV.

im looking to buy a speed trap machine but i dont want to pay too much, ive seen some at 70 quid and dont want to go much over that, i am looking for 1 that sees mobile lasers and not just hotspots ...

So this is the deal i went through a yellow light and got past it before it turned red and this BRIGHT Light flashed behind me once i was already through the intersection and stopped their was a car ...

I am taking my girlfriend to watch the sunset on the east side of Big Sand Lake in Orlando. I was looking for places to park my truck and I saw about 100 feet or so of dirt road. I posted a link to ...